Handbook of Psychology, Volume 4: Experimental Psychology

(Axel Boer) #1

158 Touch


(1987, Experiment 2). In this study, participants were con-
strained to use a particular exploratory procedure while a
target property was to be compared. Across conditions, each
exploratory procedure was associated with each target prop-
erty, not just the property with which the procedure sponta-
neously emerged. The accuracy and speed of the comparison
were determined for each combination of procedure and prop-
erty. When performance on each property was assessed, the
optimal exploratory procedure in this forced-exploration task
(based on accuracy, with speed used to disambiguate ties) was
found to be the same one that emerged when subjects freely
explored to compare the given property. That is, the sponta-
neously executed procedure was in fact the best one to use,
indicating that the procedure maximizes the availability of
relevant information. The use of contour following to deter-
mine precise shape was found not only optimal, but also nec-
essary in order to achieve accurate performance.
Turvey and associates, in an extensive series of studies,
have examined a form of exploration that they call “dynamic
touch,” to contrast it with both cutaneous sensing and haptic
exploration, in which the hand actively passes over the sur-
face of an object (for review, see Turvey, 1996; Turvey &
Carello, 1995). With dynamic touch, the object is held in the
hand and wielded, stimulating receptors in the tendons and
muscles; thus it can be considered to be based on kinesthesis.
The inertia tensor, described previously in the context of
weight perception, has been found to be a mediating con-
struct in the perception of several object properties from
wielding. We have seen that the eigenvalues of the inertia
tensor—that is, the resistance to rotation around three princi-
pal axes (the eigenvectors)—appear to play a critical role in
the perception of heaviness. The eigenvalues and eigenvec-
tors also appear to convey information about the geometric
properties of objects and the manner in which they are held
during wielding, respectively. Among the perceptual judg-
ments that have been found to be directly related to the iner-
tia tensor are the length of a wielded object (Pagano &
Turvey, 1993; Solomon & Turvey, 1988), its width (Turvey,
Burton, Amazeen, Butwill, & Carello, 1998), and the orienta-
tion of the object relative to the hand (Pagano & Turvey,
1992). A wielded object can also be a tool for finding out
about the external world; for example, the gap between two
opposing surfaces can be probed by a handheld rod (e.g.,
Barac-Cikoja & Turvey, 1993).


Relative Availability of Object Properties


Lederman and Klatzky (1997) used a variant of a visual search
task (Treisman & Gormican, 1988) to investigate which
haptically perceived properties become available at different


points in the processing stream. In their task, the participant
searched for a target that was defined by some haptic property
and presented to a single finger, while other fingers were pre-
sented with distractors that did not have the target property.
For example, the target might be rough, and the distractors
smooth. From one to six fingers were stimulated on any trial,
by means of a motorized apparatus. The participant indicated
target presence or absence by pressing a thumb switch, and
the response time—from presentation of the stimuli to the
response—was recorded. The principal interest was in the
search function; that is, the function relating response time to
the number of fingers that were stimulated. Two such func-
tions could be calculated, one for target-present trials and the
other for target-absent trials. The functions were generally
strongly linear.
Twenty-five variants on this task were performed, repre-
senting different properties. The properties fell into four
broad classes. One was material properties: for example,
rough-smooth (a target could be rough and distractors
smooth, or vice versa), hard-soft, and cool-warm (copper vs.
pine). A second class required subjects to search for the pres-
ence or absence of abrupt surface discontinuities, such as
detecting a surface with a raised bar among flat surfaces. A
third class of discriminations was based on planar or three-
dimensional spatial position. For example, subjects might be
asked to search for a vertical edge (i.e., a raised bar aligned
along the finger) among horizontal-edge distractors, or they
might look for a raised dot to the right of an indentation
among surfaces with a dot to the left of an indentation
(Experiments 8–11). Finally, the fourth class of searches re-
quired subjects to discriminate between continuous three-
dimensional contours, such as seeking a curved surface
among flat surfaces.
From the resulting response-time functions, the slope and
intercept parameters were extracted. The slope indicates the
additional cost, in terms of processing time, of adding a sin-
gle finger to the display. The intercept includes one-time
processes that do not depend on the number of fingers, such
as adjusting the orientation of the hand so as to better contact
the display. Note that although the processes entering the
intercept do not depend on the number of fingers, they may
depend on the particular property that is being discriminated.
The intercept will include the time to extract information
about the object property being interrogated, to the extent the
process of information extraction is done in parallel and it
does not use distributed capacity across the fingers (in which
case, the processing time would affect the slope).
The relative values of the slope and intercept indicate the
availability ordering among properties. A property whose
discrimination produces a higher slope extracts a higher
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